Title: Human Impact on Ecosystems
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2Succession
- The non-seasonal, directional (time) change in
community within a habitat - Unstable r-strategists ?stable K-strategists
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4Primary succession is the series of community
changes which occur on an entirely new habitat
which has never been colonized before. Examples
of such habitats would include newly exposed or
deposited surfaces, such as landslips, volcanic
lava and debris, elevated sand banks and dunes,
quarried rock faces. A number of stages (seres)
will take place in which an initial or 'pioneer'
community will gradually develop through a number
of different seres, into a 'climax' community,
which is the final stage.
5- Secondary succession is the series of community
changes which take place on a previously
colonized, but disturbed or damaged habitat.
Examples include areas which have been cleared of
existing vegetation (such as after tree-felling
in a woodland) and destructive events such as
fires. - Secondary succession is usually much quicker than
primary succession for the following reasons - There is already an existing seed bank of
suitable plants in the soil. - Root systems undisturbed in the soil, stumps and
other plant parts from previously existing plants
can rapidly regenerate. - The fertility and structure of the soil has also
already been substantially modified by previous
organisms to make it more suitable for growth and
colonization.
6- As a result of Succession
- Stability increases (r ? K)
- Diversity increases
- 2 types
- Primary - from bare rock (Xerarch)
- Secondary from a disturbed habitat e.g. water
course silting (Hydrarch) - 2 mechanisms
- Autogenic changes are caused by the organisms
themselves e.g. lichen - Allogenic - change is elicited by external
agency e.g. climatic event, landslide, human
intervention
7Human Impact on Ecosystems
- Man impacts environments for a number of reasons
- Food production agriculture and wild harvest
- Energy production
- Pollution
- Together these activities stress ecosystems
- Stress leads to a reduction in species diversity
- Populations sizes may increase (lack of
interspecific competition)
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9Human Impact on Ecosystems Food Production
- The battle to feed humanity is over. In the
course of the 1970s the world will experience
starvation of tragic proportions hundreds of
millions of people will die. Paul Ehrlich, The
Population time Bomb, 1968.
We now have more food than ever before -
Improved irrigation and farming methods - High
yield crops - Fertilizers pesticides What
Cost?
10Effects of Intensive food Production-Problems
- Monoculture
- growing a single species over a large area
trees/ food crops - Loss of habitat including increase in field size
for efficiency - Reduces species diversity
- Loss of nutrients leaching due to soil erosion
- Invasion of opportunistic weeds
- Intensification of disease/ predation problems
- Loss of soil structure due to inorganic
fertilisers leads to topsoil erosion
11Effects of Intensive food Production - Solutions
- CHEMICALS
- Herbicides (weedkillers, natural/ synthetic)
- Pesticides (insecticides fungicides
natural/synthetic) - Fertilisers (NPK organic)
- DIFFICULTIES
- Toxicity (to consumer non target species)
- Bioaccumulation through food chain (leading to
toxicity) - Resistance requiring stronger chemicals
- Persistence
- Pollution (leaching/ runoff)
12Examples - Fertilisers
- Fertilisers (organic or NPK)
- Eutrophication excessive nutrients into water
(deoxygenation) - Nitrate in water blue baby syndrome due to
nitrite oxidation of haemoglobin - Cancer not certain
13Examples - Pesticides
- Pesticides can be toxic to man and other species
- DDT/DDE synthetic oestrogen
- thin egg shell - birds of prey
- altered sex ratio (small penis, testicles
- RATS, alligators, fish
- Link to breast cancer
- Fall in sperm counts (controversial - sex more
often) - Organic farmers better sperm quality (Denmark)
14Examples - Herbicides
- Kill indiscriminately
- Good bad weeds killed
- Loss of food/ habitat for variety of animals
- Loss of food web diversity unstable
- Loss of useful insect etc. species
- Loss of soil improving microbes/ animals
- Possibly toxic
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16Increasing Energy Needs
- Energy requirements have increased
- Principally they have been met by polluting
fossil fuels - This has lead to carbon dioxide emissions
increasing substantially
Carbon dioxide causes GLOBAL WARMING
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19Global Warming
- Principally due to carbon dioxide (60)
- Other gases include
- Methane (20)
- CFCs (14)
- Nitrogen Oxides (6)
- Ozone (upper atmosphere) (8)
- Carbon dioxide has increased by 31 during
industrial revolution - Increase due to combustion, deforestation
20Climate change solutions
- Change of 0.6C over last century
- Projected rise 1.5 -4.5 C
- Not all due to Carbon Dioxide, sunspot activity
- Solutions
- Reduce fossil fuel combustion
- Switch to alternative fuel sources (renewable)
Conserve forests Add iron to sea
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33Global Warming Problems
- Coral bleaching
- Loss of photosynthetic algae (zooxanthellae) from
commensal relationship due to 1C increase in sea
temperature - Disease spread
- Malaria possible in south britain
- Loss of species niches
- e.g. arctic species on cairngorms
http//www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/hadleycentre/
models/modeldata.html
34- Food production needs to double to meet the needs
of an additional 3 billion people in the next 30
years
Climate change is projected to decrease
agricultural productivity in the tropics and
sub-tropics for almost any amount of warming
35Other Pollution from combustion of fossil fuels
- Acid rain (SO2, Nox)
- Other pollutants
- PM 10s - Asthma
- Ozone layer
- CFCs activated by high energy photons
- Chlorine free radicals react with ozone in upper
atmosphere
36Pollution
- Heavy metals
- Interfere with enzyme action/ biochemical
processes - Result of industrial activity, common at foundry
sites/ gas works - Can be removed by expensive soil cleaning
- Reeds may be able to concentrate and so remove
them in their tissues
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39Pollution - biotransformation
- Biotransformation is when organisms metabolise
chemicals into different chemicals. Typically
this is a detoxification process. - Sometimes less toxic chemicals are changed into
more toxic chemicals - e.g. metallic mercury to very toxic methyl
mercury - Minamata bay, Japan
40Pollution - Biomagnification
- If a pollutant is not excreted or destroyed by an
organism, it will concentrate in the animals
body. - If that animal is subsequently consumed, all of
the toxin will pass to the consumer - Consequently, the consumer will have a higher
concentration of toxin in their body. - HCB hexachlorbenzene
41http//www.ourstolenfuture.org/Basics/chemlist.htm
42Tributyl Tin
- Anti fouling chemical (now banned) used to
prevent build up on ships hulls - In higher concentrations can lead to changes in
molluscs e.g. dog whelks/ oysters - Sex ratio changes/ bifurcate penis
43- Love Canal
- housing estate near Niagara falls, built on
chemical dump (dioxin, benzene) - Low birth weight and growth retardation
- Canal